This book is heavy on melodrama and angst, but light on plot development and likable characters. The book takes place in the small town of Seaside, New Jersey, where Clay Wharton's family lives. Clay is returning home to see his estranged twin brother, Ted, who is dying of AIDS. Clay also develops romantic ties with Leigh Spenser, a single mother who's Ted' best friend. Ted reveals a secret to Clay that involves Leigh and her son. There's also a nonsensical subplot about a small-time criminal who worked with Leigh's father who now stalks her, thinking she has access to some sort of treasure. Any chapters involving this go absolutely nowhere.
The author handles the touchy subject of HIV/AIDS and the Christian response to this disease and the people who live with it fairly well. However, the characters are fairly bland and unmemorable. Towards the climax of the book, everyone having made peace with everyone else, the author (for some reason) throws in a deus ex machina that leaves single mother Leigh wealthy; this strikes me as ridiculous and unrealistic, and it's a shame, since much of the dialogue between the characters was realistic and good.
Not a good book by any means, and I probably won't seek out the other seasonally based books this author has written, but if you're bored, it's worth an hour or so of reading.